[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 9]
[House]
[Pages 12061-12069]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                RECEPTION OF FORMER MEMBERS OF CONGRESS

  The Speaker of the House presided.
  The SPEAKER. On behalf of the House, I consider it a high honor and a 
distinct personal privilege to have the opportunity to welcome so many 
of our former Members and colleagues as may be present here for this 
occasion. We all pause to welcome you. I am particularly pleased that 
we have the former Speaker of the House, Tom Foley, with us today.
  As we all know, Speaker Foley is a principled leader and a true 
statesman who presided over the House in a spirit of bipartisanship. 
Welcome. We are honored by your presence, Mr. Speaker.
  I want to acknowledge the leadership of Congressman Jim Slattery, the 
President, and Congressman Jay Rhodes, the Vice President, and your 
leadership of the Former Members Association. You have shown the 
service to our country. We know it didn't begin when you first set foot 
on the floor but want to acknowledge that it certainly did not end when 
you left the Congress. Thank you all for your many years of public 
service and great leadership in the Congress.
  As I look around, I wish to acknowledge also the distinguished former 
minority leader of the House, Bob Michel. What an honor for us to have 
you here, Bob. It's wonderful to see you. As we all know, he is a 
dedicated public servant, as have you all been and are. All of your 
hard work, the legislation you created, the lives you impacted, your 
legacy is still reflected in the halls of this magnificent Capitol, and 
not only that, more importantly, in communities around the country. 
Many of you were friends and mentors to those of us who are here now 
and we acknowledge that. We learned so much from all of you.
  I am pleased to also acknowledge that in welcoming you, I am joined 
by our distinguished majority leader, the gentleman from Maryland (Mr. 
Hoyer). He and I know, as do our colleagues, that the knowledge, 
experience and wisdom you shared in your time here has helped guide our 
work. I have said to the Members on many occasions, when we come here, 
we are not only colleagues to each other, we are colleagues to everyone 
who ever served here before, because this, the People's House, is a 
place where the continuity of ideas and commitment and patriotism to 
our country has a oneness to it. In that spirit, I feel a colleague to 
my own father who served in the Congress of the United States.
  Do we have a Senator here, as well? Senator Specter, welcome. Thank 
you for being here.
  Thank you all for your work and your leadership on behalf of the 
American people. On behalf of the current Members again, thank you for 
your leadership. Please enjoy your day back in the People's House.
  I now have the privilege of turning the gavel over to a Republican, a 
wonderful, wonderful leader in the Congress when he served here, 
respected on both sides of the aisle. He, too, a principled leader who 
served with a spirit of bipartisanship and patriotism in the Congress. 
I am pleased to acknowledge the Vice President of the Association and 
hand the gavel to Mr. Rhodes to take the chair. The Honorable Jay 
Rhodes.
  Mr. RHODES (presiding). Thank you so much for lending us the Chamber 
of the People's House. We appreciate it very much.
  It occurred to me last night that Ms. Pelosi and I were elected in 
the same year, 1986, the 100th Congress, and that Congress has produced 
two Speakers of the House, Mr. Hastert and Ms. Pelosi. Now, I don't 
know if that's historical or not, but it's at least interesting. Thank 
you so much.
  The regular order of business would be for me now to ask the Clerk to 
call

[[Page 12062]]

the roll, but I believe that in the interest of recognizing Mr. Hoyer's 
time limitations, I would ask that the distinguished majority leader, 
the gentleman from Maryland, utilize such time as he may consume.
  Mr. HOYER. Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker.
  He says he yields me so much time as I may consume. One of the great 
benefits of being majority leader, or minority leader, for that matter, 
although no one seeks the benefit of being minority leader, I 
understand that, but is that you are unlimited in time. You're yielded 
1 minute and you take such time as you want. You become very arrogant 
in the use of verbiage at that point in time. But I am very, very 
pleased to be here with all of you. I try to make these events every 
time you come, because as Speaker Pelosi, and what an historic event 
you have just participated in. You are the first group of former 
Members in over 200 years of our Republic that has been greeted by a 
woman Speaker. The President was so gracious the first time that Nancy 
and I went down and had lunch with the Speaker. It was just 2 days 
after the election. President Bush could not have been more gracious 
and more generous in his comments about the historical aspect and his 
congratulations for Nancy's accomplishment. It is an extraordinary 
accomplishment. As you have noticed, she is as strong and focused and 
competent a Speaker as I have served with. And I know there is a 
wonderful friend here, who I also want to greet, and that is my friend 
Tom Foley. When I came to the Congress of the United States, Tom was 
the whip. I had the great honor of being the whip at one point in time, 
as you know.
  I am now in the office that Tom Foley peopled. He was ensconced in 
the first floor of the Capitol, we had many whip meetings there, and he 
taught me how to be a Member of Congress. And I could have had no 
better teacher than Tom Foley, no more principled, decent person than 
Tom Foley.
  I will tell you this, and you have heard me say it before. I would 
not have chosen to be in the minority. And in 1994 with this hostile 
takeover as I refer to it of the institution of which I was a Member, I 
became a minority stockholder in, one of the sadnesses, I think, of the 
1994 transfer of authority was not so much it was a transfer of 
authority, that's what happens in democracies, but that an 
extraordinary American did not become the Speaker of the House, 
somebody that I love and respect and honor who I think is one of the 
most decent people with whom I have served in 40 years in a legislative 
body and that is, of course, the very distinguished, wonderful American 
first as well as, of course, a distinguished Republican leader, my 
friend Bob Michel. Bob, thank you for what you have done.
  When the American people think of what they would like to see in the 
Congress of the United States and the kind of collegiality and respect 
for one another and civility that they would like to see, they think of 
Bob Michel and Tom Foley in my opinion. They may not think of them by 
name, but they think of who they are and what they represent.
  I am also pleased to see Arlen Specter who was masquerading as a 
former Member sitting with the Speaker. As a matter of fact, Ray LaHood 
traveled with me overseas. We went to Darfur, we were in Sudan, and we 
were in Egypt. In Egypt, we had a cocktail party, a reception at the 
Ambassador's residence and I introduced Ray LaHood as the former 
staffer of the Speaker. Kathy, his wife, came up to me and said, ``Bob 
Michel was never Speaker.'' I said, ``I know, but in my mind he should 
have been.''
  Jack Kemp is here, also my friend. We had the opportunity to serve on 
the Appropriations Committee as well. Jack, of course, a distinguished 
Vice Presidential candidate, now who continues as so many of you do in 
your own public lives to be so involved in trying to make our country 
better. Jack, thank you for all you have done.
  I could mention each and every one of you, but Speaker Rhodes would 
say you're pressing on that 1 minute a little much. But let me say that 
those of you who are former Members, some, of course, are former 
Members by choice. Some, as you reflect upon a democracy that sometimes 
makes mistakes, are former Members by mistake of your constituencies. 
But in any event it occurs to me that all of you are financially far 
better off than us poor people you left behind, and I congratulate you 
for that.
  I want to congratulate Mr. Slattery, who's our leader on the 
Democratic side, and Jay Rhodes. I saw Jay in the hallway just the 
other day. I had the opportunity of serving briefly with his dad and 
then with him and both reflect the decency of which I have spoken 
earlier.
  Let me also say that I am now the majority leader, and thwarting the 
will of the majority is something that we criticize very severely and 
properly so. In a democracy, you do not want to thwart the will of the 
majority. But as majority leader, I want you to know that I work very 
hard at thwarting the will of the minority. Sometimes they get upset by 
it. I don't understand that, Bob, but it happens.
  Let me thank all of you. Let me thank all of you for holding high the 
institutional values that the Founding Fathers and Americans want to 
establish, a body that brings together the various differences within 
our society, the various interest groups within our society, and tries 
to synthesize those differences into rational consensus for progress 
for our country. If we continue to do that, we will continue to merit 
the respect of our fellow citizens. If we do not, then they will 
properly have us all become former Members.
  God bless what you have done, are doing and continue to do on behalf 
of our country and on behalf of the House of Representatives. Thank you 
very much.
  Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Mr. Leader. One of the worst kept secrets in 
the House of Representatives is that Mr. Hoyer is one of my two 
Congressmen. He doesn't know that yet. I will write him about the 
pothole fairly soon.
  Thank you, Mr. Hoyer. I appreciate it very much.
  And now if the Clerk will call the roll of the former Members of 
Congress.
  The Clerk called the roll of the former Members of Congress, and the 
following former Members answered to their names:


Former Members of Congress Participating in 37th Annual Spring Meeting 
                         Thursday, May 10, 2007

  Mr. Bowen of Mississippi
  Mr. Browder of Alabama
  Mr. Buechner of Missouri
  Mrs. Byron of Maryland
  Mr. Coyne of Pennsylvania
  Mr. DioGuardi of New York
  Mr. Foley of Washington
  Mr. Forbes of New York
  Mr. Frey of Florida
  Mr. Frost of Texas
  Mr. Gilman of New York
  Mr. Glickman of Kansas
  Ms. Heckler of Massachusetts
  Mr. Hertel of Michigan
  Mr. Hockbrueckner of New York
  Mr. Hughes of New Jersey
  Mr. Johnson of Wisconsin
  Mr. Kastenmeier of Wisconsin
  Mr. Kemp of New York
  Mr. Klein of New Jersey
  Mr. Konnyu of California
  Mr. Kramer of Colorado
  Mr. Kyros of Maine
  Mr. Lancaster of North Carolina
  Mr. Lent of New York
  Ms. Long of Louisiana
  Mr. Mazzoli of Kentucky
  Mr. Michel of Illinois
  Mr. Moore of Alabama
  Mr. Moore of Louisiana
  Mr. Nichols of Kansas
  Mr. Parker of Mississippi
  Mr. Parris of Virginia
  Mr. Pollock of Alaska
  Mr. Rhodes of Arizona
  Mr. Sarasin of Connecticut
  Mr. Sarpalius of Texas
  Mr. Slattery of Kansas
  Mr. Smith of Oregon
  Mr. Sundquist of Florida
  Mr. Symms of Idaho
  Mr. RHODES. The Chair announces that 41 former Members of Congress 
have responded to their names as being present.
  At this point, it is my pleasure to introduce to you a very good 
friend and a distinguished colleague, the President of the Former 
Members, Mr. Slattery from Kansas.

[[Page 12063]]


  Mr. SLATTERY. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
  It's a pleasure to see you all this morning and it's great to welcome 
you back to this institution that we love. First of all, let me say 
that it's a special privilege for us to be greeted by the Speaker so 
warmly.
  Thank you, Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Hoyer, for those 
wonderful greeting remarks. I would like to just associate myself with 
Steny Hoyer's remarks about all of the distinguished Members that are 
here this morning. I won't be redundant in recognizing all of you again 
except to say that it is particularly wonderful to see Minority Leader 
Bob Michel here, Jack Kemp, and former Speaker Foley, who all of these 
people inspired so many of us when we first came to this institution. 
We are particularly grateful to see you. It's great to see Secretary 
Glickman here, Secretary Henson Moore, and also Governor Sundquist 
here. It's great to welcome all of you back. Thank you very much for 
coming.
  It is always an honor and a privilege to return to this magnificent 
institution which we revere and where we shared so many memorable 
experiences. Service in Congress is both a joy and a heavy 
responsibility. Whatever your party affiliation, we have great 
admiration for those who continue to serve their country in this unique 
institution. We thank them all for once again giving us the opportunity 
to report on the activities of the U.S. Association of Former Members 
of Congress. This is our 37th annual report to Congress, and, Mr. 
Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members be permitted to 
revise and extend their remarks.
  Mr. RHODES. Without objection, so ordered.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Our association is nonpartisan. It was chartered by 
Congress but receives no funding from Congress. All the activities 
which we are about to describe are financed either from membership 
dues, program-specific grants and sponsors, or at our fund-raising 
dinner. We have a wide variety of domestic and international programs 
which several other Members and I will discuss briefly. Our membership 
numbers almost 600, and our purpose is to continue the service to 
country which for many began during our terms in the House of 
Representatives and the United States Senate.
  I have had the privilege to serve as President of our association for 
almost 1 year and I would like to take this opportunity to thank my 
predecessor for passing this organization on to me in great condition. 
Jack Buechner was our President for 2 years and although great personal 
tragedy befell his family during his tenure, he steadfastly implemented 
a vision which I share and that is that the Former Members Association 
be known and respected for the substantive programs we undertake, be it 
in legislative strengthening work abroad or teaching American college 
students about the role of democracy in the United States.
  We again have had a very successful, active and rewarding year. We 
have continued our work serving as a liaison between the current 
Congress and legislatures overseas. We have created partnerships with 
highly respected institutions in the area of democracy building and 
election monitoring. We have created new projects, most notably a 
webcasting program which reaches thousands of college students on a 
weekly basis. And we again sent dozens of bipartisan teams of former 
Members of Congress to university campuses here in the United States 
and abroad as part of our Congress to Campus Program. I am, therefore, 
very pleased to now report on the program work of the U.S. Association 
of Former Members of Congress.
  Less than 2 years ago, our association approached the Canadian 
Association of Former Members of Congress and the Association of Former 
Members of the European Parliament to create an entity that would train 
former legislators in democracy building work, most notably election 
monitoring. The resulting organization, the International Election 
Monitors Institute, has become the cornerstone of our democracy 
building work.
  I now would like to ask one of the founders of this institute, Dennis 
Hertel of Michigan, to report on this aspect of our programming.
  Mr. HERTEL. I thank the gentleman from Kansas.
  Mr. RHODES. The Chair recognizes Mr. Hertel for such time as he may 
consume, so long as it's not too much.
  Mr. HERTEL. Thank you, Jim, for giving me the opportunity to report 
on the International Election Monitors Institute and other advances our 
association has made in this field. The institute has created a board 
of directors made up of former legislators from the United States, 
Canada and Europe. I am pleased to see so many of them with us here 
today from Canada and Europe. I especially want to thank Doug Rowland 
and his wife Helen for their great leadership in our efforts. We work 
together to train our former colleagues in accepted election 
observation conduct, particularly the Code of Conduct created by the 
United Nations, and we collaborate with several renowned organizations 
in this field to send our members on election monitoring missions 
across the globe. We have an invitation from OSCE to add our trained 
observers to their missions, primarily in eastern Europe. In addition, 
we are coordinating with the OAS to have former legislators play a role 
in their delegations. Thanks to the Canadian International Development 
Agency, we now have a 5-year grant to create a training course and 
other initial programs to get the institution off the ground, to begin 
this very month. We are extremely honored to be one of a few 
organizations that were invited to participate in an election 
monitoring convention in Strasbourg, France, earlier this year.
  But the concept goes beyond election monitoring. We envision that our 
members can become permanently instrumental in democracy building work, 
such as training newly elected legislators, or aiding in a peaceful 
transition of government. We, therefore, are working closely with 
organizations such as NDI, IRI, IFES, and the U.S. Department of State 
so that the unique expertise we have can be used to maximum benefit. 
For example, last year we had the opportunity to bring our members 
together with elected officials from countries such as Kenya and 
Afghanistan. We were able to share our experience and aid those nations 
as they try to establish a democratic form of government. In addition 
to all of these projects, we are thrilled to continue our working 
relationship with the House Democracy Assistance Commission, so ably 
chaired by David Price, Congressman from North Carolina. We will work 
with them as they bring visiting delegations to the United States, and 
we will have our members travel abroad to help implement their program 
in its overseas legislative strengthening missions.
  I am very excited that our association has embarked on these types of 
missions and I believe that we are making a real difference in 
strengthening democracy worldwide. Please see our Web site at 
www.usafmc.org for a much more detailed description of these projects.
  I really want to thank the members who have been so active in 
sacrificing their time, including those members who went to oversee the 
Ukraine election over the Christmas holidays, to show how they have 
stood up for democracy around the world and making the great sacrifice 
in their own personal lives. Thank you.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Thank you, Dennis, for the report.
  Mr. RHODES. Will the gentleman suspend for a moment.
  The Republican leader, Mr. Boehner, is in the Chamber and out of 
deference to what I know is a busy schedule for him, I would like to 
recognize the Republican leader.
  Mr. BOEHNER. Good morning to all of you and welcome back for the 37th 
annual Former Members Day. I look around the audience and see a lot of 
familiar faces. I just want to say thank you. Thank you for your 
service to the institution and thank you for what you are continuing to 
do.
  I presume that some of you know, but of your colleagues, Bob 
Walker's,

[[Page 12064]]

wife passed away several days ago. Our prayers are with Bob and his 
family. Bob and I served together. His wife was a great influence on 
him and on his career, and it's sad to see her go over a fight with 
cancer that had gone on since last summer.
  I had to come today, one, to see all of you, but to see my good 
friend Bob Dole. Bob and I got to know each other in 1994, when I was 
this bomb-throwing new Member, relatively new Member--Sarpalius 
remembers--and then in 1995 after Republicans took the majority, Bob 
and I sat in many bicameral leadership meetings together. And for some 
young whippersnapper who didn't know the ways around here, not that I 
always agreed with Senator Dole, but I always had great respect for 
him. Especially now, looking back those 12, 13 years ago, I realize how 
much I learned from Bob. I think Bob represents all that we would 
expect of ourselves in his demeanor, the way he did his business here. 
He represents an entire generation of Americans, the World War II 
generation, and I couldn't miss this opportunity to come and say hello 
to him.
  Now, all of you know that Bob would tend to sit on his porch and work 
on his tan. Then he would run off to Florida on the weekends and work 
on his tan. And one night when we could still fly airplanes, private 
airplanes out of National, I ran into Bob one day as we were going 
somewhere, he was coming back, and he looked over at me and says, 
``Hey, tan man.'' And so this has been a running joke between the two 
of us, because if there was somebody who always had a better tan than I 
did, it was Dole.
  I could tell other stories, Bob, but I think I'll stop there. Let me 
just say welcome. Welcome back to all of you. Thank you for what you 
did for this institution to keep it alive and healthy for our 
generation. I just hope that those of us who have some guiding hand in 
where this institution is going today can do as good a job as all of 
you have in terms of leaving the institution in a stronger way for the 
next generation of leaders. Thank you and welcome.
  Mr. RHODES. On behalf of the association, Mr. Boehner, thank you very 
much for your time and your thoughts and for the work you do for all of 
us.
  Mr. Slattery.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Thank you, Leader Boehner, for coming by and greeting 
us. We appreciate it. I also appreciate your service to our country and 
to this institution.
  In addition to the international work that Dennis just highlighted, 
our association also focuses on creating a dialogue involving current 
Members of Congress and their colleagues in legislatures abroad. We 
administer four congressional study groups involving Germany, Turkey, 
Mexico and Japan. We have arranged almost 500 special events at the 
U.S. Capitol for international delegations from over 80 countries and 
the European Parliament. We hosted meetings for individual Members of 
Parliament and parliamentary staff, and organized approximately 50 
foreign policy seminars in about a dozen countries involving more than 
1,500 former and current legislators.
  To report in more detail about the Congressional Study Groups, I 
yield the floor to the former President of the Association, Jack 
Buechner from Missouri.
  Mr. BUECHNER. Thank you, Jim.
  The association actually operates as the secretariat for four very 
special programs where we share legislative ideas with 
parliamentarians, our staff to their staffs, in Germany, which is the 
flagship of our program, and the longest standing one, Turkey, Japan 
and Mexico. The study group on Germany serves as a model for all the 
other study groups under the umbrella of the association and it has 
been in existence for 20 years. It has allowed communication of really 
an extraordinary status. The study group was founded in 1983 as an 
informal group and became formal in 1987. Ongoing study group 
activities include a Distinguished Visitors Program at the U.S. Capitol 
for guests from Germany; sponsoring annual seminars involving Members 
of Congress and the Bundestag; providing information about participants 
in the Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange Program; and organizing a 
senior congressional staff study tour to Germany. The 2007 annual 
Congress-Bundestag seminar took nine current Members of the House to 
Hamburg and Berlin for meetings with their peers in the Bundestag. In 
addition, we arranged a meeting for the group with German Chancellor 
Angela Merkel and were thrilled that she participated in a follow-up to 
that meeting here on Capitol Hill just last week. The Congressional 
Study Group on Germany would like to thank Craig Kennedy of the German 
Marshall Fund, the primary supporter of activities related to the study 
group. Additional funding comes from a group of corporations who have 
been very supportive, including Lufthansa, Daimler Benz, BASF, Deutsche 
Telekom and DHL Americas.
  Emulating Germany and the other study groups, the association 
established a Congressional Study Group on Turkey at the beginning of 
2005, one of our strategic allies and is at the crossroads of many 
challenges of the 21st century. Current Members of Congress have been 
brought together with their legislative peers in Turkey and serves as a 
platform for participants to learn about relations between our two 
countries. Thanks to funding from the Turkish Coalition of America, the 
Economic Policy Research Institute and other groups, including the 
German Marshall Fund, this is becoming a very, very special 
relationship. We also want to thank Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan who 
also came over and met with our members and the congressional Members.
  The association serves as the secretariat for the Congressional Study 
Group on Japan and on Mexico. We have been lucky enough to have Foreign 
Minister Taro Aso as a visitor twice and then just recently Ambassador 
Chris Hill, head of the U.S. Delegation to the Six-Party Talks on the 
North Korea nuclear issue, spoke to a very special group of sitting 
Members of the Congress.
  Last but not least we have got the study group on Mexico which has 
really been special in taking together senior staffers and exchanging 
them. I have had the pleasure of moderating a follow-up to this trip 
when our organization hosted a webcast focused on immigration, 
obviously an issue that is of great concern to both parties.
  Let me also add that the association has had a highly productive 
working relationship with the French Ambassador, his Excellency Jean-
David Levitte which has led to the creation of the Former Members 
Committee on France.
  There are so many things that the association has done and we thank 
the Congress for allowing us to work with them and have them exchange 
with their counterparts throughout the world. We hope it will continue 
that way. I think that the Members can be very proud of the work they 
do to make these groups possible. I look forward to being an active 
participant in the activities of the study groups for years to come.
  Thank you.
  Mr. RHODES. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  Mr. Slattery.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Jack, thanks again for the report.
  We can be proud, I think, of the excellent programming offered by 
these study groups. Of course not all of our activities are 
international in nature. One of the most gratifying programs involving 
our association's members is the Congress to Campus Program. This is a 
bipartisan effort to share with college students throughout the country 
our unique insight on the work of the Congress and the political 
process. We have collaborated on this program for many years with the 
Stennis Center for Public Service and we appreciate the invaluable 
assistance they render to make this program so successful.
  Since 2003, this program was managed by our colleague David Skaggs in 
conjunction with the Council for Excellence in Government. David has 
returned to public service and is now executive director of Colorado's 
Department of Higher Education. But he did a tremendous job managing 
the Congress

[[Page 12065]]

to Campus Program and under his leadership it expanded year after year. 
During this last academic year which just concluded, we visited 28 
schools and interacted with approximately 13,000 students. We thank 
David for his efforts.
  To further report on this program is Mike Parker of Mississippi. 
Mike, it is good to see you and look forward to a brief report here on 
the Congress to Campus Program.
  Mr. PARKER. Mr. Chairman, in the interest of time I would like to 
just submit my report for the record, we're running a little short of 
time today, but encourage everyone to get involved in the Congress to 
Campus Program. It is an extremely effective program for our 
organization.
  Thank you, Jim, for the opportunity to report on this outstanding 
program. The Congress to Campus Program addresses a significant 
shortfall in civic learning and engagement among the country's young 
people of college age. It combines traditional educational content 
about American government and politics (especially Congress) with a 
strong message about public service, all delivered by men and women who 
have ``walked the walk.'' The Program sends bipartisan pairs of former 
Members of Congress to visit college, university and community college 
campuses around the country. During each visit, the Members conduct 
classes, hold community forums, meet informally with students and 
faculty, visit high schools and civic organizations, and do interviews 
and talk show appearances with local press and media.
  This year, Congress to Campus has expanded to include former Member 
participation in Washington, DC area meetings with student groups 
wishing to learn about public service, the U.S. Congress and Federal 
Government, and important political and policy issues. All told, this 
academic year former Members spoke to more than 13,000 college and high 
schools students under the auspices of the Congress to Campus Program. 
We have to thank the Council for Excellence in Government and the 
Stennis Center for Public Service without whom this great program could 
not have been conducted this year.
  In the 2006-2007 academic year, the program sponsored twenty-four 
events involving twenty-eight colleges and universities around the 
country and the world. These visits took thirty former Members to 
universities, service academies, and colleges in fourteen states and 
three countries. Eleven former Members made more than one campus visit.
  We continue to fine-tune the content and substance of program visits 
based on feedback from Members and host professors. The program asks 
visiting Members and host professors to complete an evaluation of each 
visit. We encourage host schools to include nearby colleges and 
universities in Congress to Campus visits and to schedule a broad scope 
of classes and activities for the former Members. We will continue to 
make changes in response to the suggestions of participating former 
Members and host faculty.
  A draft schedule of events is prepared in advance of each campus 
visit and reviewed by staff to assure variety as well as substance. 
There is a conference call before each trip with Members and the 
responsible campus contact person to review the revised schedule and 
iron out any remaining problems. Members also receive CRS briefing 
materials on current issues and background information on government 
service opportunities prior to each visit.
  This year the Congress to Campus Program greatly expanded its working 
relationship with the People to People Ambassador Program (PTP). PTP 
brings groups of Junior High students from around the country to the 
Washington, DC area to participate in ``World Leadership Forum'' 
events. Students are nominated by teachers to attend and are selected 
based on their academic achievement, interest in government and 
international affairs, and leadership potential. This academic year 
former Members participated in twenty-seven PTP events by speaking to 
students about public service and character in political and 
legislative leadership.
  The Congress to Campus Program's association with PTP furthers the 
Program's goals of promoting public service and understanding of the 
U.S. Congress and federal government. Several former Members were more 
than generous with their time and efforts as they participated in 
several of these early-morning PTP events. Those participating in PTP 
events this year were Bob Carr (MI), Bill Clinger (PA), Orval Hansen 
(ID), Matt McHugh (NY), Bruce Morrison (CT), Ron Sarasin (CT), and 
David Skaggs (CO). I also participated in some of these meetings and 
can highly recommend the experience to my colleagues. It is just great 
to interact with these kids!
  Congress to Campus made its first international visit in October 2003 
to the United Kingdom. Since that time campus visits have taken former 
Members to universities in Canada, China, Germany, and back to the 
United Kingdom. This year former Members made four visits outside of 
the U.S. which included stops at eight universities in Canada and the 
United Kingdom.
  The success of the Program obviously depends on Members' 
participation. With travel back and forth, Members end up devoting 
about three days to each campus visit. This is a priceless contribution 
of an extremely valuable resource. This year Members of the Association 
will again be surveyed to solicit information regarding their 
availability for and interest in a program campus visit. We will use 
responses to these surveys and personal contact with the membership to 
update the roster of those available to make campus visits. Association 
Members are encouraged to complete and return the survey they will 
receive this summer and then to be ready to accept assignments to one 
of the fine institutions of higher education the Program will serve 
next year.
  Interest in Congress to Campus remains strong in the academic 
community. Association Members participating in campus visits are 
enthusiastic about the value of the Program and the rewards it brings 
to all who are involved in those visits. The Program could be expanded 
even further on domestic levels if funding uncertainties can be 
addressed and Member participation is broadened. Thank you.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Mike, thanks so much. Again, we thank David Skaggs for 
his leadership on this. We are running short on time here today, so we 
will move along quickly.
  There are numerous other activities of the Association of Former 
Members which deserve to be highlighted today, but in the interest of 
time we are going to be very brief in this.
  I would like to yield to my friend and colleague Lou Frey of Florida 
who conceived this idea of a webcasting program. Lou, if you could give 
us a brief report on the webcasting project which I think holds great 
potential in terms of our ability to communicate especially with 
college students all across the country and we are already reaching 
thousands with this webcasting program, thanks to your initiative.
  Mr. FREY. Thank you, Mr. President.
  I have an institute at the University of Central Florida and we have 
about 500 to 1,000 kids come every 6 months. It was rather frustrating 
because lot of young people couldn't get there. We said maybe we can 
put this on the Internet and somebody will look at it. We started doing 
that and next thing you know, we had about 60,000 or 70,000 young 
people over the Internet looking at it.
  So I went to Jim and I said, Jim, there is no better place for 
programming than the former Members of Congress. There's more 
intelligence here, there's more knowledge, and it's really needed 
across the country. And why don't we see if we can take this idea and 
use it for the former Members.
  So we started that process. We have had, oh, five, six or seven 
Internet programs already. We have reached about 60,000 people. We just 
signed an agreement with an Internet radio station that has up to 13 
million subscribers, and we were very pleased to see Staples has agreed 
to come on as our chief sponsor. So now we've got a base of maybe 60 
colleges, a school district in California, a number of high schools, 
and I think by the time we get to this place next year, we seriously 
should have somewhere between a half a million people and a million 
people on our Internet system. It really will get the former Members 
out across the country and it is something that's really needed.
  I want to mention, too, that Brook Smith, who is the head of it, the 
network, itself, has been a great help, Jim, in working with us. I will 
submit my remarks for the Record.
  Thank you, Jim. You are absolutely right, in addition to the election 
monitor venture Dennis Hertel described earlier, the webcasting project 
is certainly the most exciting new development for our Association in 
many years. I became involved in creating programming for the Internet 
via the Lou Frey Institute of Politics and Government at the University 
of Central Florida. We have a symposium every six

[[Page 12066]]

months and it always seemed to me that the panels and expert 
discussions we hosted ought to reach an audience greater than the five 
hundred to a thousand people we could fit into an auditorium. So about 
2 years ago we put one of our events on the internet and hooked up a 
couple of universities to participate. The response was tremendous and 
it very quickly became obvious that we had discovered a real need for 
substantive and issue-specific programming to go out to a community of 
universities and high schools. Picture a three-hour program focused on 
the environment. It goes out to numerous schools via the Internet and 
students from all over the country can view it and, more importantly, 
engage in a live dialogue by asking questions and e-mailing comments to 
the panelists.
  The obvious next step was to expand the list of content providers 
while also expanding the list of viewers. Given all the important and 
fascinating work our Association does, I immediately thought of the 
former Members as a regular webcast producer. Our Association staff, 
particularly Pete Weichlein and Rebecca Zylberman, have put tremendous 
effort and imagination into this idea and they have really run with it. 
We've worked together for many months on the webcasting project and we 
have created some very impressive programming and discussions. This in 
turn has driven university subscribers and we now have over 60 
institutions of higher learning, along with over 20 high schools and an 
entire California school district, subscribing to the program. That's a 
potential audience of over 500,000 students! We also have an agreement 
with an internet radio station that reaches 13 million subscribers. And 
the list keeps on growing. The first webcast of the Association was in 
early November of last year. Our staff put together three separate 
panels consisting of almost 20 of our Association members to analyze 
every aspect of the mid-term elections. The webcast lasted three hours 
and was viewed by over 60,000 students. We have since then put together 
a slew of very impressive and informative programming, focusing for 
example on President Bush's State of the Union Address or on the 
immigration debate in the Congress. Just yesterday we hosted a one hour 
webcast involving our Canadian and European colleagues to discuss the 
importance of election monitoring and the mechanics of observing both a 
campaign and an election. This program is a great way of reaching out 
to thousands of college and high school students. It gives them the 
chance to have a real discussion with our members about topics they 
read about in the newspapers or hear about on TV. And it gives our 
members the chance to interact with the next generation of America's 
leaders. Given the great work we do with the Congress to Campus 
Program, the webcasting project is a natural extension of that effort.
  To make the webcasting project a permanent addition to our 
programming, we had to find some partners who could support this 
endeavor. We are working with the Educational Webcasting Network (EWN) 
and its President Brook Smith and they provide to us the technological 
know-how to present a professional broadcast to our students. Also, via 
the EWN, we have found a corporate sponsor to make the program a 
reality. I am very pleased to announce today that Staples will support 
our webcasting project and give it the necessary backing to continue 
this active and exciting endeavor. We are thrilled about this new 
partnership and I would like to thank Staples for the trust they have 
placed in us.
  Virtually everyone of our Association's many programs lends itself to 
being discussed via a webcast. For example, I am working right now on 
completing a follow-up to the Association's very successful 
publication: Inside the House, Former Members Reveal How Congress 
Really Works. This second volume will compile the rules of the road of 
politics and life former and current Members of Congress have sent to 
me over the past 2 years. For instance, less than a year before he 
passed away, President Ford sent me a five-page summary of his rules. 
What were your basic rules of thumb, both in politics and in life? How 
did they play out once you got to Capitol Hill? We have received a 
tremendous number of responses to our last call for submissions, but it 
is not too late to send me your rules of the road, just do it as soon 
as possible. You can contact our Association office and they'll let you 
know how to get it to me. We are hoping to finish the book later this 
year and will have a book presentation via our webcast once the 2nd 
volume is published.
  Our Association has taken great strides toward becoming a well-known 
and highly respected think tank nationally and internationally for a 
wide range of tremendously important issues. We all have such a unique 
skill-set and experience, and I am thrilled to see that via the U.S. 
Association of Former Members of Congress there is a vehicle to share 
that expertise with the public, particularly students, both here in the 
United States and abroad. Thank you.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Thank you, Lou.
  Mr. Speaker, in the interest of time, I will insert the rest of our 
report in the Record.


                          dinner, new orleans

  Thank you, Lou, for that report and thank you also for pioneering 
this webcasting opportunity for our Association. I agree with you that 
this is a very exciting development with tremendous potential for our 
organization and its members. Our Association also owes Lou Frey a debt 
of gratitude for his 10th year as chairman of our Annual Statesmanship 
Award Dinner. This is the Association's only fundraising event and 
without Lou Frey we would not have had 10 years of financial growth for 
our organization. He is tireless, some say merciless, in whipping our 
dinner committee into shape and working until the very last minute to 
make the evening a success. The 10th annual dinner was held in March 
and we were very pleased that we could honor not one, but two of our 
former colleagues. We bestowed upon former Member Dirk Kempthorne of 
Idaho--as you well know he currently serves as Secretary of the 
Interior--our Distinguished Service Award. And, we took the occasion of 
this being our 10th dinner, to create a new award: the Excellence in 
Public Service Award. We recognized former Member Rob Portman of Ohio 
for his tremendous work since leaving Congress, most recently as the 
Director of OMB. Mr. Speaker, allow me to just briefly highlight some 
of the other activities of our Association during 2006. For example, in 
October of last year the Association hosted a Fall Meeting in New 
Orleans. The purpose of the Fall Meeting is to bring our membership 
together in a place other than Washington, DC. A little more than one 
year had passed since the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, and we 
wanted to give our members the opportunity to see for themselves how 
far the rebuilding effort had come along and how much work still needs 
to be done. At this point we should thank Senator Mary Landrieu and her 
fantastic staff for helping us put together a very intense and 
impressive program. Our members met with city officials, including the 
Superintendent of Police, as well as the Army Corps of Engineers. We 
toured the lower 9th Ward and the 17th Street Canal Breach. It is an 
understatement to say that our group was unprepared for the devastation 
still rampant in that beautiful city. Even today, there are whole 
neighborhoods that remain uninhabitable. But we should also highlight 
that the reconstruction efforts the city and its people have undertaken 
are amazing and inspiring. New Orleans is one of the jewels of this 
country and we need to be mindful that the city deserves all the help 
we can give it.


                           Officers and Board

  Mr. Speaker, the Association benefits tremendously from the efforts 
and leadership of many people. I wish to thank my fellow officers of 
the Association for their energy, dedication and invaluable counsel 
during my first year as President. They are Jay Rhodes, Dennis Hertel, 
Mike Parker, and Jack Buechner. Let me also thank the members of our 
Board of Directors and our Counselors for providing excellent guidance 
and support throughout the year. In addition, we benefit greatly from 
the wonderful work of Auxiliary, led so ably by Debi Alexander.
  Mr. Speaker, to administer all these programs takes a staff of 
dedicated and enthusiastic professionals. We expanded our team from 
four to five full-time employees since our last report, which is 
another sign of how active and successful a year it has been for the 
Association.


                    Visiting Foreign Former Members

  Mr. Speaker, we already reported on the work of the International 
Election Monitors Institute which we created in conjunction with our 
colleagues from Canada and from the European Union. We are very pleased 
to have with us today several former legislators as our guests. The 
Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians is represented by its 
Chair, Doug Rowland, as well as former Members Don Boudria and Doug 
Frith. Mr. John Parker is with us representing the Ontario Association 
of Former Parliamentarians. From the Association of Former Members of 
the European Parliament we welcome Anna Pietrasik and Richard Balfe. 
And from the New Zealand Parliament we are joined by Maurice McTigue. 
We are honored that you are here and thank you for the great 
relationship our organizations enjoy.
  Mr. RHODES. I would like to just add what I know you would like to 
add in terms of thanks to Lou Frey for his service to this association.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Absolutely.

[[Page 12067]]


  Mr. RHODES. He does a lot of work for us and it always turns out 
well. It always adds to his ulcers, but in the end everything comes out 
just fine, Lou. We appreciate you very, very much. Thank you.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Amen, Lou. Appreciate you and appreciate all you do and 
have done for the association.
  Mr. Speaker, I would like to just take 1 minute to acknowledge the 
incredible staff that we have over at the Association: Pete Weichlein, 
our executive director, who's doing an incredible job; Sudha David-Wilp 
who manages our international programs is just wonderful; Rebecca 
Zylberman, the senior program officer; Meredith McNeil, the 
international program officer; and Tracy Fine, our executive assistant. 
This staff that we have put together over there thanks to my 
predecessors is just doing a tremendous job. I encourage all of you to 
be in touch with them as you attempt to engage in the work of the 
association.
  At this time, Mr. Speaker, it is now my sad duty to inform the House 
of those people who served in Congress and have passed away since our 
report last year. They are:
  William Robert Anderson of Tennessee
  Lloyd Bensten of Texas
  Joel Broyhill of Virginia
  Clair Burgener of California
  Helen Chenoweth-Hage of Idaho
  Harold Collier of Illinois
  N. Neiman Craley, Jr., of Pennsylvania
  Steven B. Derounian of New York
  Reverend Robert F. Drinan of Massachusetts
  Thomas Eagleton of Missouri
  President Gerald R. Ford of Michigan
  Robert Giaimo of Connecticut
  Ralph Harding of Idaho
  Chic Hecht of Nevada
  Jim Jontz of Indiana
  Thomas S. Kleppe of North Dakota
  Thomas Manton of New York
  Robert Mathias of California
  Jack Metcalf of Washington
  Juanita Millender-McDonald of California
  Sonny Montgomery of Mississippi
  Charles W. Norwood, Jr., of Georgia
  James Olin of Virginia
  Charlotte Reid of Illinois
  Theodore Risenhoover of Oklahoma
  J.T. Rutherford of Texas
  George A. Smathers of Florida
  Virginia Smith of Nebraska
  Marion Gene Snyder of Kentucky
  Gerry Studds of Massachusetts
  I ask all of you, including the visitors in the gallery, to rise for 
a moment of silence as we pay our respect to their memory.
  Thank you.
  Mr. Speaker, as you know, each year the Association presents a 
Distinguished Service Award to an outstanding public servant and former 
Member of Congress. The award rotates between parties, as do our 
officers. This year, we are very pleased to be honoring a remarkable 
Republican, former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole from Kansas, my home 
State.
  General Colin Powell once described him as ``a plainspoken man of 
strength, maturity and integrity.'' I know him as a fellow Kansan with 
an unconventional candor and prairie wit who loves his State and loves 
our country. We all know him as one of the most prominent political 
figures of our time and one of the legislative giants in our Nation's 
history.
  Senator Robert Dole was born July 22, 1923 in Russell, Kansas. He has 
been quoted as saying, ``Anyone who wants to understand me must first 
understand Russell, Kansas. It is my home, where my roots lie, and a 
constant source of strength. In Russell, I came to understand there are 
things worth living for, and, if need be, dying for.''
  Senator Dole served in World War II as a platoon leader in the 
legendary 10th Mountain Division in Italy. In 1945, he was gravely 
wounded on the battlefield, spent 39 months in the hospital, and was 
twice decorated for heroic achievement. His decorations including two 
Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star with Oak Leaf Cluster.
  Senator Dole graduated from Washburn University in 1952 with a law 
degree and went on to represent then the Third District of Kansas, 
later what became known as the Big First, from 1961 to 1969. Elected to 
the U.S. Senate in 1968, Senator Dole served as either majority leader 
or minority leader from 1985 to 1996. He was chairman of the Committee 
on Finance during the 97th and 98th Congresses, as well as chairman of 
the Republican National Committee in 1971-72.
  While serving in the Senate, Senator Dole earned national acclaim for 
his leadership on behalf of the disadvantaged and Americans with 
disabilities. He left his mark on many pieces of major legislation, 
ranging from farm bills to Social Security and food stamps. He was 
always a conservative and strong voice for fiscal responsibility.
  In 1976, he was the GOP candidate for Vice President alongside 
President Gerald Ford. In 1996, Senator Dole was the Republican Party's 
candidate for President. In 1997, President Clinton recognized Senator 
Dole's remarkable career of public service by granting him a 
Presidential Medal of Freedom, our Nation's highest civilian honor.
  Since his retirement from the Senate, Senator Dole has reestablished 
his law career here in Washington; has written a book called ``One 
Soldier's Story: A Memoir''; served as chairman of the National World 
War II Memorial; and joined forces with President Bill Clinton to serve 
as cochair of the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund, assisting the 
educational needs of the families of the World Trade Center, the 
Pentagon and United Flight 93. Most recently, President Bush appointed 
Dole as chairman of the commission to investigate problems at Walter 
Reed Army Medical Center.
  The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics housed at the University of 
Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas, was established to encourage public service 
and promote bipartisanship and statesmanship in American politics.
  I have often said that when the doors were closed and the tough work 
of governing had to be done, Bob Dole could be counted on to make the 
hard decisions that he believed were in the best interest of the 
country that he loves. That makes him in my mind a statesman and a 
great patriot.
  On behalf of the U.S. Association of Former Members of Congress, it 
is a great pleasure and honor for me to present our 2007 Distinguished 
Service Award to former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole. Let me read 
the plaque as it is inscribed:
  ``Presented by the United States Association of Former Members of 
Congress to Senator Robert J. Dole of Kansas for a lifetime of 
dedicated and exceptional service to his country. Whether as an officer 
in World War II or as the highest ranking Republican in the U.S. 
Senate, Bob Dole has always exemplified strong and courageous 
leadership. He has received his Nation's highest honors, including the 
Presidential Medal of Freedom, two Purple Hearts, and the Bronze Star. 
He served as Senate majority leader and as his party's nominee for Vice 
President and for President. Bob Dole is a true American hero and his 
former colleagues from both sides of the political aisle salute him. 
Washington, DC, May 10, 2007.''
  Mr. RHODES. The Chair is pleased to recognize the Honorable Senator 
Robert Dole for such time as he wishes to consume.
  Mr. DOLE. Well, I am pleased to have somebody with Kansas roots 
presiding. So thank you.
  Mr. RHODES. The blood is there, Senator.
  Mr. DOLE. Well, I never had this many people show up when I was in 
the House, so this is a big improvement over the 8 years I spent here.
  I've been trying to get Slattery to use Grecian Formula. Once you get 
used to the taste, it works very well. I'll send him another bottle.
  I've been thinking about this place and all the people here and some 
of whom I've served with. There are not many left anymore, but I see my 
friend Bob Michel here.
  It will be 11 years on June 11 since I left the Capitol and 38 years 
this past January that I left this Chamber. Forty-six years ago I 
walked into this Chamber and didn't have a clue. I didn't know anything 
about anything.

[[Page 12068]]

Maybe that happens even now, but I doubt it. Before I go any further, I 
want to recognize my wife, Elizabeth. Thank you for being here.
  I just jotted down a few things. I always spoke on the 1-minute rule. 
Speaker McCormack was always very kind to give us a little time, but it 
was to say the least exciting to have a front row seat for somebody 
from Russell, Kansas, in the Congress of the United States. My hero, of 
course, was President Eisenhower. He was leaving Washington just as I 
was arriving. I remember shortly after he left, he invited our freshman 
class, all the Democrats and Republicans in our freshman class, to come 
to Gettysburg where he spent about 3 hours giving us a personal tour of 
the Gettysburg battlefield, and then we had lunch and he put us on a 
bus and waved good-bye. That is still one of the most memorable moments 
in my career, because whether you're a Democrat or Republican, 
Eisenhower was revered by people of all generations.
  I came to Washington when John Kennedy was elected President, and I 
remember it very well, because there was a big, big snowstorm the night 
before the inaugural, and I was trapped in my office in the Cannon 
Building and I didn't have any clean shirt to wear and there was a drug 
store at that time right across the street, they even handled shirts, 
so I went over and bought me a fresh shirt and it was a very, very 
bitter cold day. I remember when President Kennedy gave his inaugural 
address, he challenged the Nation, all of us, Republicans, Democrats 
and led by a new generation because he was a new generation, as he 
said, ``Tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace, proud 
of our ancient heritage and unwilling to witness or permit the slow 
undoing of those human rights to which this Nation has always been 
committed, and to which we are committed today at home and around the 
world.''
  He went on, declaring, and this is a very famous quote that we all 
know about, that we would ``pay any price, bear any burden, meet any 
hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, to assure the survival 
and the success of liberty.'' It is much the same today though we have 
maybe different ideas on how it is to be done.
  I was thinking back about what really happened as far as legislative 
achievements in the 8 years and many things when I was here did happen, 
many things were important. I remember amendments to the national 
school lunch program and the food for peace program that was initiated 
by President Eisenhower. It was a nonpartisan program. I was here when 
I heard President Johnson proclaim, ``We shall overcome.'' Here I was a 
conservative Republican, President Johnson a liberal southern Democrat, 
but we were as one on the defining issue of our times and the defining 
issue of our times was civil rights. I was here and proudly voted 
``aye'' in 1964 when the first civil rights legislation was passed.
  I remember Speaker Rayburn. I remember I used to grip the chair and 
he was very quiet, very reserved. I never had a long conversation with 
him. I don't think many people did. But I served longer with John 
McCormack of Massachusetts, who was Speaker from 1962 to 1971. And then 
when I left the House and went to the Senate, I knew Carl Albert very 
well. He was a great guy and from Oklahoma. Tip O'Neill, Jim Wright, 
Tom Foley, Newt Gingrich.
  I think of all the Speakers I knew, the one that I had the best 
rapport with was Tip O'Neill. I think Bob Michel might agree, because 
he would sit in his office and roll that cigar back and forth and have 
a conversation. He was just one of the finest politicians--and I use 
that word in the right sense--finest politicians I ever met. 
Politicians take a lot of beating which they don't deserve, but that's 
another topic.
  But Tip O'Neill was a friend of another leader of this body, Gerald 
Ford. As many of you know, Gerald Ford's ambition was to become Speaker 
of the House. Well, he never made it, but he became Vice President and 
President of the United States which probably to him was a second 
prize. And I think we were all reminded earlier this year that history 
chose a good and decent man to heal the wounds of Watergate when 
President Ford was there.
  I remember being asked, I can't remember by who, what I would do in 
the House. Well, my answer was to follow the advice of a late Senator 
from Kansas, Senator Frank Carlson, who told me to sit back and listen 
and then stand up for what you believe in. The truth is while I served 
here, I did what my parents taught me: You work hard, you keep your 
word, you treat others the way you want to be treated, and, of course, 
you do your best.
  As Jim Slattery pointed out, I'm proud of my Kansas roots and I would 
not have made it here had it not been for my friends in Russell who 
sort of rallied around me after World War II. They taught me that the 
greatness of America lies not in the power of her government but in the 
goodness of her people. I owe my life to my family, to a lot of doctors 
and nurses in and out of Army hospitals, and many, many others.
  Finally, age may or may not bestow wisdom, but it does carry certain 
privileges, among them the right to remember and perhaps distill 
whatever perspective comes with experience. As I reflect on my years in 
Congress and in Washington, what comes to mind first are not the 
legislative battles won or lost but the friendships forged for life. 
Thomas Jefferson said that ``a friendship is precious not only in the 
shade but in the sunshine of life. And thanks to a benevolent 
arrangement of things, the greater part of life is sunshine.'' Much of 
the sunshine in my life stems from the privilege of serving in Congress 
and working with men and women of both parties.
  I am very proud to receive this award. I have learned that if you 
live long enough, you get a lot of awards, they're coming in pretty 
fast at my age, but I consider this a very distinct honor because I 
know how hard you all worked.
  I would just close with, some of us at least, it may be a confession 
on my part. First I want to thank you for all you do. But somebody 
handed me a little poem called Around the Corner. Sometimes we get so 
busy and so maybe self-centered sometimes, this is what it is:

     Around the corner I have a friend,
     In this great city that has no end.
     Yet the days go by and weeks rush on,
     And before I know it, a year is gone.
     And I never see my old friend's face,
     For life is a swift and terrible race.
     He knows I like him just as well,
     As in the days when I rang his bell.
     And he rang mine but we were younger then,
     And now we are busy, tired men.
     Tired of playing a foolish game,
     Tired of trying to make a name.
     Tomorrow, I say, I will call on Jim,
     Just to show that I'm thinking of him.
     But tomorrow comes and tomorrow goes,
     And distance between us grows and grows.
     Around the corner, yet miles away,
     ``Here's a telegram, sir.'' ``Jim died today.''
     And that's what we get and deserve in the end,
     Around the corner a vanished friend.

  Thank you.
  Mr. SLATTERY. Senator Dole, one other thing we wanted to give you. 
This is two little booklets of congratulatory letters from your 
friends. We wanted to just present that to you, also.
  Mr. RHODES. Our thanks to the Senator from the United States of 
America, Mr. Dole.
  There are a couple of things I need to mention. We would be remiss if 
we did not recognize that we have several foreign visitors, Members of 
Parliament from Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the European Union and 
Great Britain. We appreciate your being with us and hope you'll enjoy 
the rest of the day with us.
  Members who did not record their presence can come forward and record 
their presence verbally with the Reading Clerk. I need to mention to 
you that our buses are out on Independence Avenue. It would be helpful 
if you would proceed to those buses as if you were civilians rather 
than Congressmen.
  Last, I want to recognize a voice that has not been heard here today. 
That is the voice of Paul Hays. Paul was the Reading Clerk in this 
House when each and every one of us was here. Paul has

[[Page 12069]]

retired. I understand that there is to be a reception in Paul's honor 
this evening at 5 o'clock in the Rayburn Room.
  I want to thank all of you for being here. Good luck to you.
  The House of Representatives will reconvene in 15 minutes.
  Accordingly (at 10 o'clock and 8 minutes a.m.), the House continued 
in recess.

                          ____________________